Questions over the 5th Amendment are raised when judges can order you to unlock a device with your print -- but you can't be forced to give up your password. Also, Sony may have its own legal trouble wit a video-recording contact lens, and celebrities at the Met Gala attempt to bring tech to fashion.

Poachers in South Africa are making major profits because of demand across Asia to eat a sea snail which lives in a shell. Abalone is highly prized, but catching illegal fishermen in the act is almost impossible. Al Jazeera's Tania Page reports from Cape Town.

Mexico is one of the most dangerous places for journalists. Not only have many been subjected to violence there, in the last sixteen years more than 100 have been killed while doing their job. Al Jazeera's Natasha Ghoneim reports from Mexico City.

The number of Sri Lankans suffering from asthma attacks has soared by 50 percent in the past ten years for unidentified reasons. Some chest specialists think up to two million Sri Lankans are struggling to breathe, and many children and adults are also failing to get help.

Cuban cigars, rum and salsa dancers have welcomed 700 cruise ship passengers to Havana.They were aboard the first cruise ship to sail from the US to Cuba in decades.Their voyage was made possible because the communist government has lifted its longstanding ban on Cuban exiles returning to their homeland by sea.

Bangladesh has slipped further down the world ranking for media freedom. Last week the editor of the country's first and only magazine for gay and transgender people was killed. It was the latest in a series of attacks targeting journalists.

Volendam with tourists, so popular that it is not fun anymore, complain some people. Is the situation really so dire in the fishing village and what should be done to prevent major problems in the dike?

Master Sgt. Daniel Raimondo is one of the American servicemen that helped rescue three children and their mother from a burning building in South Korea. He joined CNN's New Day to talk about the rescue.

A new CDC report finds that while suicides have increased significantly since 1999, the rate for girls between 10 and 14 has tripled during that time. Experts can link the uptick to increased cases of mental illness, but causation is not clear.

As the sun sets on a Friday evening, a few hundred Pakistani men gather to watch the latest round of traditional Kushti fighting. “Welcome to the International Kushti stadium in Dubai,” laughs one man, looking at the patch of desert wasteland that lies ahead. Nestled between the Deira fish market and a busy roundabout, many of those in the crowd have travelled far to watch just over an hour of sparring before sunset.

We would like to attract attention from all our readers about this case mentioned by SkyNews, because contains some important information. - INC News

Police investigating the death of a teenage girl after she took an ecstasy pill have arrested two people.

Faye Allen suffered an adverse reaction after apparently taking a pill nicknamed "MasterCard" while on a night out in Manchester. Officers were called to Victoria Warehouse in Trafford in the early hours of Monday morning, but the 17-year-old died in hospital a short time later.

A 19-year-old man and a 20-year-old woman arrested in the St Helens area are being held on suspicion of possession with intent to supply a Class A drug. Detective Chief Inspector Ben Ewart of Greater Manchester Police's Trafford Division, said: "Our thoughts and condolences remain with the family of this girl at this heart-breaking time.

"We have made two arrests in connection with this investigation and currently have a man and a woman in custody who will be questioned later today. "Sadly, we know that other people will have taken this form of ecstasy, known as 'MasterCard', and we are continuing to urge anybody who may have taken it to please get themselves checked out.

"If you have information that you believe can assist us with our investigation or you know where this drug may have come from then please contact police." Anyone with information should call police on 0161 8567662 or 101 or the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.